Appearance: Brown curly hair, purple button with brown dress pants, a watch, light skin with light freckles, dark blue hazel eyes. 5'3" short and feral.
Personality: INFJ, chaotic good (usually?), creative, mean but affectionally, smart but a slow learner, awkward, feisty, make her mad and she will beat the sh*t out of you but if you yell at her she will cry, has the energy of "im sad!" with sunglasses and laughing.
Backstory: Madison is an artist and storyteller and wants to pursue those dreams, however needs money to help herself. So she applied to be an intern for the company -XXXX, and was suppose to be trained by the original employee 257, but they were fired, and Madison took their spot on her first day. However she doesn't even know how to do the job, so when she left her desk she couldn't seem to find anyone around. She must figure out what was going on in this maze of an office!
Inventory: A baseball bat, for protection of course, from what no one knows. A sketchbook where she takes notes, along with a pen! She more so just doodles though instead. A modern phone that doesn't work, even though everything else in the office is outdated with the technology.
Additional Info:
Since she just arrived at the company she still has memories of the outside world, but she's slowly loosing them the longer she stays inside the Parable. She still technically has them, but they're more so locked away. Remembers better when other people mention the outside world.
Doesn't know who Stanley is at first, but later on meets him through some of her runs and endings.
Is an intern, and isn't getting paid :/
The Internship is for Graphic Designs, Madison was planning on using this for experience while she saves up for college. Plus she dabbles in a bit of engineering as well and computer science.
Heeyyyy so like, what if I thought 404 sucked but at the same time really like them. Not like in a romantic or platonic kinda way, just like..I think they’re neat
u h,,,,,,,,
Get help.
257!!! noo!!!!
It's true.
>:[
Please don't look at me with that face. It's too cute...
All over Hell, radios had been popping up. No one knew who was doing this, or why. All that ever played was static anyways. Until the day it didn't, the day the Radio Demon made his presence known.
It was just another normal day in Hell. 257 days until the next extermination, but the Radio Demon, Alastor, didn't need it to be any special day to kill.
Alastor walked up to the mirror, straightened his tie, and put on a smile. "It's time to let everyone know why I'm here..." He walked upstairs from the 1920's style bar he'd been staying at and made his way to the front door. Avoiding the sick from all the shellacked people from the night prior, he opened the door and stepped out onto the street.
After a little while, and with limited use of his power, he finally tracked down the last overlord he needed. He would broadcast today. He snuck between the shadows, slowly watching and waiting. Eventually, the overlord turned down into an alley, and Alastor appeared in the middle of the alley behind them.
A: "Hello pal, how are you doing this fine day?"
He looked down the Alley, watching every movement, like a hunter and his deer. The overlord turned around and tilt their head curiously at Alastor.
O: "Oh hello there, I didn't see you. What is your business? I have no time for pleasantries."
A: "Now now, that's no way to treat a... fan, now is it?"
Alastor mirrored the head tilt and smiled wider.
A: "And you know, if I were you, I'd be very worried about my safety."
The overlord scoffed and turned around to walk away, only see to Alastor now standing right in front of them.
A: "Do try to run, that is my favorite part..."
Alastor laughed as he started to elongate and twist, a red x now appearing on his forehead. His mouth no longer moved, instead blinking with every syllable that came out of his mouth. What once looked like small twigs leaving in his hair, transformed into a frightening set of antlers.
The Overlord turned and attempted to flee, they rose to power through trading souls for drugs, not fighting! But it was too late, the further they ran, the closer the hoove clomps were. Strange glyphs started appearing in their vision and then there was-
Alastor returned to the bar, now cleaned and ready for tonight's hooligans, and headed downstairs. He walked over to some broadcasting equipment. Most of it was recent, but there were some bits that you could tell had been in Hell for a while now. Alastor sat down in his chair, tapped his microphone, sending a redish spark to the equipment and booting it on.
Hell went silent, the radio static had stopped. They all listened in, when all of a sudden-
A: "Why hello there people of Hell! I will be your radio host tonight! The name's Alastor, and it is a pleasure being here with everyone tonight and for a long time moving forward."
Out on the streets, he heard the laughter. This is it? This is what the radios were for? The months of static, just for some random demon to start a radio show? It was preposterous, laughable.
A: "Now then, it seems that some of you may think I'm laughable, hmm? Well well well, then perhaps let me prove my credentials."
The people of Hell waited, then the static returned. Only, this time it was... different. They could swear they heard something, something familiar? Then it screamed. Oh the voices, how they screamed and moaned, they were trapped in eternal torment. Then a singular hellfolk realized:
H: "those voices... they belong to... overlords."
From there it spread, everyone knew. This... this demon, killed all the missing overlords. After 29 minutes or so of just this, the static stopped.
A: "Now then, I hope you all learned your lesson, I wouldn't want anyone getting themselves hurt. But in case you didn't get it, let me teach you, never mess with the Radio Demon."
Author's Note: Hello! This is my first ever attempt at a fan-fic! I hope you enjoyed, and idk, I might write more! Feel free to comment/pm criticism, enjoyment, etc. This kinda barely deviates from the source material, but it was also retconned too, so I'm operating in that gray zone. Any parts that are orange mean that Alastor is in that slightly more demonic tone. Anything in red is when he is fully radio mode, and he wants you to feel it. (Also whenever I'm emphasizing certain things) Alright, that's all, bye!
At the time of their Inauguration? Here's the list of the Vice Presidents' Age at Inauguration, from youngest-to-oldest:
AGE AT INAUGURATION: NAME OF VP [Administration]
36 years, 42 days: John C. Breckinridge [Buchanan]
40 years, 11 days: Richard Nixon [Eisenhower]
41 years, 353 days: Dan Quayle [G.H.W. Bush]
42 years, 128 days: Theodore Roosevelt [McKinley's 2nd VP]
42 years, 256 days: Daniel D. Tompkins [Monroe]
42 years, 352 days: John C. Calhoun [J.Q. Adams/Jackson's 1st VP]
44 years, 232 days: Al Gore [Clinton]
45 years, 26 days: Aaron Burr [Jefferson's 1st VP]
45 years, 346 days: Schuyler Colfax [Grant's 1st VP]
48 years, 243 days: Calvin Coolidge [Harding]
49 years, 15 days: Walter Mondale [Carter]
49 years, 56 days: Millard Fillmore [Taylor]
50 years, 72 days: Spiro Agnew [Nixon's 1st VP]
50 years, 98 days: Martin Van Buren [Jackson's 2nd VP]
50 years, 340 days: John Tyler [W.H. Harrison]
51 years, 150 days: Chester A. Arthur [Garfield]
51 years, 189 days: Hannibal Hamlin [Lincoln's 1st VP]
52 years, 105 days: Henry A. Wallace [FDR's 2nd VP]
52 years, 146 days: Lyndon B. Johnson [JFK]
52 years, 237 days: George M. Dallas [Polk]
52 years, 274 days: Garret A. Hobart [McKinley's 1st VP]
52 years, 297 days: Charles W. Fairbanks [T. Roosevelt]
53 years, 131 days: James S. Sherman [Taft]
53 years, 174 days: John Adams [Washington]
53 years, 238 days: Hubert H. Humphrey [LBJ]
53 years, 325 days: Thomas Jefferson [J. Adams]
56 years, 65 days: Andrew Johnson [Lincoln's 2nd VP]
56 years, 92 days: Kamala Harris [Biden]
56 years, 138 days: Richard M. Johnson [Van Buren]
56 years, 223 days: George H.W. Bush [Reagan]
57 years, 132 days: Adlai E. Stevenson [Cleveland's 2nd VP]
57 years, 227 days: Mike Pence [Trump]
57 years, 247 days: William A. Wheeler [Hayes]
58 years, 355 days: Thomas R. Marshall [Wilson]
59 years, 189 days: Charles G. Dawes [Coolidge]
59 years, 335 days: Dick Cheney [G.W. Bush]
60 years, 145 days: Gerald Ford [Nixon's 2nd VP]
60 years, 257 days: Harry S. Truman [FDR's 3rd VP]
61 years, 16 days: Henry Wilson [Grant's 2nd VP]
64 years, 102 days: John Nance Garner {FDR's 1st VP]
64 years, 292 days: Levi P. Morton [B. Harrison]
65 years, 178 days: Thomas A. Hendricks [Cleveland's 1st VP]
65 years, 221 days: George Clinton [Jefferson's 2nd/Madison's 1st]
66 years, 61 days: Joe Biden [Obama]
66 years, 165 days: Nelson Rockefeller [Ford]
66 years, 331 days: William R.D. King [Pierce]
68 years, 230 days: Elbridge Gerry [Madison's 2nd VP]
69 years, 38 days: Charles Curtis [Hoover]
71 years, 57 days: Alben W. Barkley [Truman]
D. H. Melhem, Gwendolyn Brooks. Poetry and the Heroic Voice, [Bibliography of Works by Gwendolyn Brooks], The University Press of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, 1987, pp. 257-259
Plymouth constructeur automobiles Américain fondée en 1928
Plymouth a écoulé près de neuf millions d'unités de sa série « standard » baptisée Plaza, Savoy, Belvedere puis Fury et Gran Fury.
Plymouth était une marque de voitures fabriquée par Chrysler Corporation aux États-Unis. Ils ont cessé de fabriquer des voitures Plymouth le 29 juin 2001. La première voiture Plymouth a été fabriquée le 7 juillet 1928. Chrysler voulait une voiture moins chère pour concurrencer Chevrolet et Ford. Les Plymouth coûtent un peu plus cher que leurs concurrents, mais incluaient plus de fonctionnalités comme les freins hydrauliques. Au début, seuls les concessionnaires Chrysler vendaient des Plymouth.
Le constructeur a commencé avec l'auto Maxwell. Chrysler a pris Maxwell-Chalmers dans les années 20 et a créé la voiture Chrysler en utilisant leurs installations. Ensuite, ils ont créé une voiture compagnon moins chère, le "52" rebaptisé "Chrysler-Plymouth Model Q" en 1928. Lorsque le Model U a été introduit en 1929, le nom "Chrysler" a été abandonné.
Les modèles des années 80
Les modèles des années soixante ont des moteurs allant jusqu'à 6 276 cm3 et un nouveau style de carrosserie moins massif. En 1960 la Valiant est une compacte plus proche des conceptions européennes.
1989 Plymouth Voyager 3 Concept
L'influence des voiture GT en Amérique amène à la présentation du coupé rapide Barracuda en 1965; Doté d'un V8 de 4,5 litres. La gamme de 1966 comprend encore la moyenne Belvedère, la grande Fury et la luxueuse V-8 "V.I.P." à toit ouvrant. La Barracuda redessinée en 1967 et dotée du moteur Six Slamt. La Road Runner atteint la vitesse de 257 km/h en 1968.
En 1975, il ne reste plus des trente-huit modèles précédents que les Fury, Valiant et Duster a cause de la crise pétrolière. En 1976, paraît la compacte Volare qui remplace bientôt la Fury. C'est la plus grosse Plymouth en 1979 alors que les Sapporo et Arrow sont des importations Mitsubishi.
La mauvaise santé du groupe
Dès le début des années 80, la plupart des voitures sont des dérivées de Dodge comme l'Horizon de 1972, la 'Turismo de 1978', la Reliant de 1980, la Gran Fuxy de 1981, la Caravelle de 1984 ou la Sundance de 1986. Dans les années quatre-vingt-dix, Plymouth reste la gamme premier prix de Chrysler. Avec des voitures empruntées à Dodge ou Mitsubishi comme la Colt, la Neon, l'Acclaim ou le monospace Voyager.
1984 Plymouth Voyager
Plymouth est donc victime, à partir du milieu des années 1970, de la mauvaise santé du groupe Chrysler en général ! mais les décisions prises au sein de la direction ont encore aggravé plus particulièrement les difficultés de la marque Plymouth. Car si Dodge peut jouer sur la carte jeune et sportive, et Chrysler sur celle du confort et du luxe, l'image de la marque reste floue.
Le créneau de la voiture populaire ne ce voit plus approprié car l'embourgeoisement de la clientèle américaine est une évolution constante depuis des années. Les marges sont par ailleurs plus faibles sur les voitures populaires que sur les modèles de moyenne et haute gamme. La nouvelle direction du groupe, qui a évité de peu la catastrophe ! ce voit davantage intéressée par les bénéfices plutôt que par les volumes de production. Dès lors, la survie de Plymouth s'avère délicate. La décision de fusionner les réseaux Plymouth et Chrysler dans les années 1980 va lui donner le coup de grâce. Le groupe Daimler
Galerie Photos - Plymouth
Gaze-specific motor memories for hand-reaching. Abekawa, N., Ito, S., & Gomi, H. (2022). Current Biology, 32(12), 2747-2753.e6.
Semantic relatedness retroactively boosts memory and promotes memory interdependence across episodes. Antony, J. W., Romero, A., Vierra, A. H., Luenser, R. S., Hawkins, R. D., & Bennion, K. A. (2022). eLife, 11, e72519.
Hyperreactivity to uncertainty is a key feature of subjective cognitive impairment. Attaallah, B., Petitet, P., Slavkova, E., Turner, V., Saleh, Y., Manohar, S. G., & Husain, M. (2022). eLife, 11, e75834.
Spontaneous Alpha-Band Oscillations Bias Subjective Contrast Perception. Balestrieri, E., & Busch, N. A. (2022). Journal of Neuroscience, 42(25), 5058–5069.
Dynamical differential covariance recovers directional network structure in multiscale neural systems. Chen, Y., Rosen, B. Q., & Sejnowski, T. J. (2022). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 119(24), e2117234119.
Spontaneous neuronal oscillations in the human insula are hierarchically organized traveling waves. Das, A., Myers, J., Mathura, R., Shofty, B., Metzger, B. A., Bijanki, K., … Sheth, S. A. (2022). eLife, 11, e76702.
Inhibitory control of frontal metastability sets the temporal signature of cognition. Fontanier, V., Sarazin, M., Stoll, F. M., Delord, B., & Procyk, E. (2022eLife, 11, e63795.
Neuronal correlates of selective attention and effort in visual area V4 are invariant of motivational context. Ghosh, S., & Maunsell, J. H. R. (2022). Science Advances, 8(23).
Cortical adaptation to sound reverberation. Ivanov, A. Z., King, A. J., Willmore, B. D., Walker, K. M., & Harper, N. S. (2022). eLife, 11, e75090.
Learned temporal statistics guide information seeking and shape memory. Lang, E. A., van Geen, C., Tedeschi, E., Marvin, C. B., & Shohamy, D. (2022). Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 151(5), 986–995.
Distinct representation of cue-outcome association by D1 and D2 neurons in the ventral striatum’s olfactory tubercle. Martiros, N., Kapoor, V., Kim, S. E., & Murthy, V. N. (2022)eLife, 11, e75463.
Early beta oscillations in multisensory association areas underlie crossmodal performance enhancement. Michail, G., Senkowski, D., Holtkamp, M., Wächter, B., & Keil, J. (2022). NeuroImage, 257, 119307.
Perceptual enhancement and suppression correlate with V1 neural activity during active sensing. Niemeyer, J. E., Akers-Campbell, S., Gregoire, A., & Paradiso, M. A. (2022). Current Biology, 32(12), 2654-2667.e4.
Multiple timescales of sensory-evidence accumulation across the dorsal cortex. Pinto, L., Tank, D. W., & Brody, C. D. (2022). eLife, 11, e70263.
Signatures of rapid plasticity in hippocampal CA1 representations during novel experiences. Priestley, J. B., Bowler, J. C., Rolotti, S. V., Fusi, S., & Losonczy, A. (2022). Neuron, 110(12), 1978-1992.e6.
A predictive coding account of value-based learning in PTSD: Implications for precision treatments. Putica, A., Felmingham, K. L., Garrido, M. I., O’Donnell, M. L., & Van Dam, N. T. (2022). Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 138, 104704.
Specializations in optic flow encoding in the pretectum of hummingbirds and zebra finches. Smyth, G., Baliga, V. B., Gaede, A. H., Wylie, D. R., & Altshuler, D. L. (2022). Current Biology, 32(12), 2772-2779.e4.
Guidance of attention from visual working memory is feature-based, not object-based: Implications for models of feature binding. Thayer, D. D., Bahle, B., & Hollingworth, A. (2022). Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 151(5), 1018–1034.
Severe distortion in the representation of foveal visual image locations in short-term memory. Willeke, K. F., Cardenas, A. R., Bellet, J., & Hafed, Z. M. (2022). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 119(24), e2121860119.
Children with ASD establish joint attention during free-flowing toy play without face looks. Yurkovic-Harding, J., Lisandrelli, G., Shaffer, R. C., Dominick, K. C., Pedapati, E. V., Erickson, C. A., … Kennedy, D. P. (2022). Current Biology, 32(12), 2739-2746.e4.
From Old Ðusyþ þemub (to temper, to toughen), descended from Ahmegon *þeemab(h) (to dare, to risk).
Definition
v.
to anneal; to heat then slowly cool material to temper or toughen it
xeibawatsngqhe'aq þymbsngherzbiqun?
forget-NRPST-2SG-INTR anneal-HAB-2SG-glass-INTR?
Did you forget to anneal the glass another time?
2. to cool down slowly
yn þymblletþysyjxti xöþllysngkaitleng ek xöþllesqeng.
for cool_down-food-INSTR-3RFLX LOC-cool-place and LOC-dry-place
Let the food cool down by itself in a cool and dry place.
3. (slg) to chill out, to calm down; to stop being pent up, angry, or pissed off
þymbsei, þymbsei, es ðeimðlmisisll!
calm_down-IMP calm_down-IMP, COP.3SG issue-small
Calm down, calm down, it's only a minor issue!
Im a dork too lol and also find those lists like the presidents/vps age when they died to be interesting! Do you maybe have access to a list like that about how old presidents&veeps were when they took office?
I do have that info available, and I'm glad that people like these kinds of lists because it means I didn't waste my time keeping this data updated over the years!
Here are the Presidents and Vice Presidents by age at the time of their inauguration:
PRESIDENTS: Age at Inauguration (Oldest-to-Youngest)
Biden: 78 years, 61 days
Trump: 70 years, 220 days
Reagan: 69 years, 349 days
W.H. Harrison: 68 years, 23 days
Buchanan: 65 years, 315 days
G.H.W. Bush: 64 years, 222 days
Taylor: 64 years, 100 days
Eisenhower: 62 years, 98 days
Jackson: 61 years, 354 days
J. Adams: 61 years, 125 days
Ford: 61 years, 26 days
Truman: 60 years, 339 days
Monroe: 58 years, 310 days
Madison: 57 years, 353 days
Jefferson: 57 years, 325 days
J.Q. Adams: 57 years, 236 days
Washington: 57 years, 67 days
A. Johnson: 56 years, 107 days
Wilson: 56 years, 65 days
Nixon: 56 years, 11 days
Cleveland: 55 years, 351 days (2nd non-consecutive term)
B. Harrison: 55 years, 196 days
Harding: 55 years, 122 days
L. Johnson: 55 years, 87 days
Hoover: 54 years, 206 days
G.W. Bush: 54 years, 198 days
Hayes: 54 years, 151 days
Van Buren: 54 years, 89 days
McKinley: 54 years, 34 days
Carter: 52 years, 111 days
Lincoln: 52 years, 20 days
Arthur: 51 years, 349 days
Taft: 51 years, 170 days
F. Roosevelt: 51 years, 33 days
Coolidge: 51 years, 29 days
Tyler: 51 years, 6 days
Fillmore: 50 years, 183 days
Polk: 49 years, 122 days
Garfield: 49 years, 105 days
Pierce: 48 years, 101 days
Cleveland: 47 years, 351 days (1st non-consecutive term)
Obama: 47 years, 169 days
Grant: 46 years, 311 days
Clinton: 46 years, 154 days
Kennedy: 43 years, 236 days
T. Roosevelt: 42 years, 322 days
VICE PRESIDENTS: Age at Inauguration (Oldest-to-Youngest)
Alben Barkley: 71 years, 57 days
Charles Curtis: 69 years, 38 days
Elbridge Gerry: 68 years, 230 days
William R. King: 66 years, 331 days*
*King's age on the day his VP term began: March 4, 1853. King was gravely ill and trying to improve his health in a warmer climate, so he received special permission from Congress to take the Vice Presidential oath on foreign soil while recuperating in Cuba, which he wasn't able to do until March 24, 1853. He died on April 18, 1853 after returning home to Alabama without ever setting foot in Washington, D.C. during his brief Vice Presidency.
Nelson Rockefeller: 66 years, 164 days
Joe Biden: 66 years, 61 days
George Clinton: 65 years, 221 days
Thomas A. Hendricks: 65 years, 178 days
Levi P. Morton: 64 years, 292 days
John Nance Garner: 64 years, 102 days
Henry Wilson: 61 years, 16 days
Harry S. Truman: 60 years, 257 days
Gerald Ford: 60 years, 145 days
Dick Cheney: 59 years, 356 days
Charles G. Dawes: 59 years, 189 days
Thomas R. Marshall: 58 years, 355 days
William A. Wheeler: 57 years, 247 days
Mike Pence: 57 years, 227 days
Adlai E. Stevenson: 57 years, 132 days
George H.W. Bush: 56 years, 222 days
Richard M. Johnson: 56 years, 138 days
Kamala Harris: 56 years, 92 days
Andrew Johnson: 56 years, 65 days
Thomas Jefferson: 53 years, 325 days
Hubert H. Humphrey: 53 years, 238 days
John Adams: 53 years, 173 days (Adams was sworn in as VP nine days before George Washington was sworn in as President in 1789.)
James S. Sherman: 53 years, 131 days
Charles W. Fairbanks: 52 years, 297 days
Garret A. Hobart: 52 years, 274 days
George M. Dallas: 52 years, 237 days
Lyndon B. Johnson: 52 years, 146 days
Henry A. Wallace: 52 years, 105 days
Hannibal Hamlin: 51 years, 189 days
Chester A. Arthur: 51 years, 150 days
John Tyler: 50 years, 340 days
Martin Van Buren: 50 years, 89 days
Spiro Agnew: 50 years, 72 days
Millard Fillmore: 49 years, 56 days
Walter Mondale: 49 years, 15 days
Calvin Coolidge: 48 years, 243 days
Schuyler Colfax: 45 years, 346 days
Aaron Burr: 45 years, 26 days
Al Gore: 44 years, 295 days
John C. Calhoun: 42 years, 351 days
Daniel D. Tompkins: 42 years, 256 days
Theodore Roosevelt: 42 years, 128 days
Dan Quayle: 41 years, 351 days
Richard Nixon: 40 years, 11 days
John C. Breckinridge: 36 years, 47 days
#i made the deliberate choice to start crossing my 7s and my zs to keep them from getting mixed up with my 2s
My Top Posts in 2022:
#5
if the witcher season 4 doesn't pull a due south and have jaskier be the only one concerned that geralt is a completely different person now, what even is the point
179 notes - Posted October 29, 2022
#4
257 notes - Posted January 11, 2022
#3
Taikaholics Anonymous annual meeting. So happy to brighten up these a couple of sad losers' day. Ten Goldblums out of a possible ten Goldblums. (x)
282 notes - Posted April 17, 2022
#2
a commission by vageege on twitter!
663 notes - Posted March 8, 2022
My #1 post of 2022
look, black sails & our flag means death are not in competition, and also i just think they should swap one character between them like the single serious human in a muppets film